MBOYA, TOM (KENYA)

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Collection: 
Document Number (FOIA) /ESDN (CREST): 
06891260
Release Decision: 
RIPPUB
Original Classification: 
U
Document Page Count: 
5
Document Creation Date: 
March 9, 2023
Document Release Date: 
May 11, 2021
Sequence Number: 
Case Number: 
F-2021-00126
Publication Date: 
June 17, 1963
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Approved for Release: 2021/05/11 C06891260 OFFICE OF CENTRAL REFERENCE CENTRAL INTELLIGENCE AGENCY (b)(3) BIOGRAPHIC INTELLIGENCE BULLETIN GOVERNMENT OF KENYA 1 JUNE -1963 dIA/CR BB 63-22 17 June 1963 (b)(3) Approved for Release: 2021/05/11 C06891260 Approved for Release: 2021/05/11 C06891260 GOVERNMENT OF KENYA 1 June 1963 On 1 June 1963,* following the victory of the Kenya African National Union (KANU) in the May elections, and the proclamation of a new consti- tution by Governor Malcolm MacDonald, the, patriarch of Kenya nationalism land president of KANU, Jamo Kenyatta, became Prime Minister of one of the last major British area in Africa to attain internal self-govern- ment; he will lead his country to complete independence, probably with- in nine months.. Selected-fOr the first time completely from the party supported by Kenya's largest and most politically conscious tribes (the Kikuyu and the Luo together comprise about 30% of Kenya's 8.5 million Africans), the cabinet reflects the divided nature of KANU it- self. Kenyatta has apportioned ministerial and sub-ministerial appoint- ments to achieve a careful balance between the main and lesser tribal groupings, the warring factions grouped around Tom Mboya and Oginga Odinga within KANU, and among the three racial segments of Kenya's population--African, Asian and White. The ages of Kenyatta's ministerial appointees range in a steady progression from the early thirties to the early sixties, with never more than a few years' interval. One notable fact emerges from .a study of the educational backgrounds of the cabinet: the onTY member who did not complete secondary school is the most able politician, Tan Mboya. Of the remaining fifteen members, --ten received either teacher's certificates or university degrees from African schools (principally Mhkerere College, Uganda), four received degrees from US institutions and one completed college in India. SUrprisingly, only one (Kenyatta) received his higher education primarily in the UK. * On 7 June, following the convening of the Parliament two additional ministers (McKenzie and Angaine) were named. -1- Approved for Release: 2021/05/11 C06891260 Approved for Release: 2021/05/11 C06891260 The composition of the cabinet of Kenya formed on:.1 and 7 June 1963 is as follows: Prime Minister Minister of Agriculture Minister of Commerce and Industry Minister of Education Minister of Finance and Economic Planning Minister of Health and Housing Minister of Home Affairs Minister of Information, Broad- casting and Tourism Jamo KENYATTA Bruce Roy MCKENZIE Julius Gikonyo KIANO Joseph Daniel OTIENDE James Samuel GICHURU Njorcge MUNGAI Ajuma Oginga ODINGA Richard Achieng ONEKO Minister of Justice and Constitu- Tam MBOYA tional Affairs Minister of Labor and Social Eliud Ngala MWEINDWA� Services Minister of Lands,:Game,.Fisheries, Lawrence George &AGIN' Water and Natural Resources Minister of Land Settlement Jackson Harvester ANGAINE Minister of Local Government and Regional Affairs 'Minister of State for Pan-African Affairs Minister of State in the Prime Minister's Office Minister of Works, Communications and Power Samuel Onyango AYODO Peter Mbiyu KOINANGE Joseph Anthony Zuzarte MURUMBI Dawson MWARYUMBA Approved for Release: 2021/05/11 C06891260 Approved for Release: 2021/05/11 C06891260 MBOYA, Tom MINISTER OF JUSTICE AND, CONSTITUTIONAL AFFAIRS 101ITYA The only politician who approaches 'the national stature of Prime Minister Jomo Kenyatta is Tom Mboya, named Minister of Justice and Constitutional.Affairs on 1 June 1963. Tough and resourceful, Mboya is general secretary of the Kenya African National Union (KANU) and derives his strength from his faction in KANU and ,from Kenya's most powerful labor organization, the Kenya Federation of Labor (Kr). Mboya is probably the major threat to Kenyatta's leadership of KANU and the country, and their relationship is an alliance of con- venience--Kenyatta needs Mboyays political brain and ability while Mboya, a Luo, needs Kenyatta's prestige and the support of the Kikuyu tribe. By far the ablest of Kenya's political figures, Mboya faces, however, the opposition of the old guard nationalistswho were jailed with Kenyatta, of the extremist, anti-Western elements in Kenya and 7,1o.fh1s.k personal enemies Consequently, although lie might wish to tighten control of a KANU suffering under what he sees as Kenyattis vacillatory leddership, he recognizes that such a Move would provoke cries from his oPponents that he was betraying the leadership of the popular old nationalist. a," Mboya's labor union career--he Was secretary general of theKKEL before assuming the post of Minister of Labor in the coalition. government of April 1962--is the foundation for his political success. He first became generally known in 1955 when. he served as mediator in a Mombasa strike and won a large pay raise for the dockers; the next year he obtained a scholarship to Ruskin College, Oxford, traveling at this time to the US (among other countries), where he made a number of contacts in the International Confederation of Free Trade Unions (ICFTU) The symbol of . African nationalism' to the West, he :has became the SyMbol of Western influence to some Africans.. Born oflitio.:-parents on .15 August 1930. on Rusinga,Island, Lnke Victoria, Mboya was baptized into the Roman Catholic Church with -19- Approved for Release: 2021/05/11 C06891260 Approved for Release: 2021/05/11 C06891260 MBOYA, Tom (continued) the name Thomas Joseph Adhiambo. He was educated at Kabaa mission, St. Mary's and at Holy Ghost College (a secondary school)--withdrawing when his father could no longer afford to help with the tuition. Shortly afterwards Mbeya.was accepted for training as a sanitary inppector; three years later he took the Royal Sanitary Institute Certificate and was appointed to the Nairobi City Council, where he served for the next two and one-half years. About 1951 he became president of the African Staff Association and built it up into the Kenya Local Government Worker's Union, becoming its national general secretary. Mboya was treasurer of the Kenya African Union in 1953 just before it was proscribed for its alleged connection with the Mau Max; later that year he became secretary general of the KFL. In March 1957 he won the Nairobi seat in the first African constitu- ency elections and proceeded to bind the eight African elected mem- bers into a solid group strongly opposed to the Lyttleton Consti- tution, under 'which they had been elected, and to demand that the British government declare Kenya an African country and advance her gradually to full democracy. His tactics were largely responsible for the breakdown of the constitution and for the subsequent Im- position of the Lennox-Boyd Constitution which gave the Africans six more elected.members. Mboya became president of the Nairobi People's Convention Party in July 1958; and the following year, after disagreeing with the Constituency Elected Members Organisa- tion on land policy, he helped to form the Kenya Independence Move- ment. In April 1960 he became general secretary of the then newly- formed KANU1 which, by February 1961, emerged as the strongest single party in Kenya, with Mboya being re-elected to his seat in the, Legislative Council by an overwhelming majority. In April of the following year he assumed the post of Minister of Labor and tmmedi- ately faced difficult tests of his political skills; the trade unions, possibly egged on by his opponents, suddenly choked Kenya with a series of strikes, but.Mboya applied pressure to both management and labor and most of the unions returned to work. Intelligent, personable and articulate, Mboya.is a superb orator in both English and Swahili and alowil, speaks extemporaneously. He is apparently a man who will adapt his words to his audience and his actions to the situation; he argues logically and with great ability and has an undoubted flair for publicity. Clever and shrewd, he possesses great drive and determination. Mboya, who has had two unsuccessful marriages outside the church was married in Catholic onamnnv in InnliAry 1962 to Pamela Odede, ii4une -20.- Approved for Release: 2021/05/11 C06891260